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| Zitat von gonzo
Ist es schon Zeit IRA Lieder zu posten?
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We're in the home of the enemy kathleen!
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| Zitat von DeathCobra
| Zitat von gonzo
Ist es schon Zeit IRA Lieder zu posten?
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Come out you Black and Tan, come and fight me like a man, tell your wife how you've won medals down in Flaahaanders
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Tell her how the IRA made you run like hell away,
from the green and lovely lanes of Killashandra.
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Yep, wird langsam wieder Zeit, morgens in Nordirland unter die Autos zu gucken.
N.Irish police suspect New IRA planted bomb in officer's car >
| Police in British-ruled Northern Ireland said on Tuesday they suspect that dissident Irish republican militants planted a booby-trap bomb found in the car of a part-time police officer.
The Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) said the bomb had been found on Monday in a car outside the family home of the female officer in Dungiven, a town near the northwestern city of Londonderry. The bomb was defused overnight.
"What is really distressing here is the terrorists placed the bomb at the rear of the car, directly at the point where the victim's three-year-old daughter sits," PSNI Assistant Chief Constable Mark McEwan told journalists.
"While the investigation is at an early stage and detectives are keeping an open mind, a strong line of inquiry is that this attack was the work of the New IRA," McEwan said. | |
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wir könnten die gelder für ungarn und türkei an schottland geben. wär ich ok mit
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Ich hab grad mal Schottland mit Slowenien, Slowakei und Kroatien verglichen, sie sind sich recht ähnlich, Bevölkerung und BIP. Und alles EU Staaten. Die Aufnahme sollte halt save sein. Wenn die aus UK austreten und dann am langen Arm (hallo Spanien!) verhungern, nützt das nix.
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[Dieser Beitrag wurde 1 mal editiert; zum letzten Mal von monischnucki am 08.05.2021 10:23]
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Nordstream umleiten und mit Whisky füllen!
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| Zitat von Randbauer
Nordstream umleiten und mit Whisky füllen!
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Alles klar, ich investiere.
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Es gab eine kleine Verstimmung zwischen Frankreich und dem Vereinigten Königreich wegen Fischereilizenzen die von Jersey nicht so vergeben wurden, wie es die französischen Fischer der Gegend wollten.
Die französischen Fischer haben eine Demo auf dem Wasser vor der Einfahrt des Hafens der Hauptstadt von Jersey angekündigt, was die Briten als "Blockade" ausgelegt haben und 2 kleinere Marineboote hingeschickt haben. Die Franzosen waren ne Zeitlang vor dem Hafen, die britischen Schiffe haben sich in der Nähe aufgehalten, die Fischer sind heim gefahren. Es gab wohl 1-2 kleinere Reibereien zwischen zivilen Schiffen.
Jetzt der Unterschied der Schlagzeilen in UK und Frankreich am 6.5. und 7.5. (relevante Bereich rot eingekreist):
https://imgur.com/a.png/XUkT0WW
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Nachtrag zu der Jersey-Geschichte:
Die Fischer dort sind natürlich maximalgefickt, weil Jersey ja spezielles Konstrukt kein EU-Mitglied war und auch nicht Abstimmen durfte ob Brexit.
Aber was da einige auf dieser Insel dann wegen der aktuellen Lage für lustige Ideen entwickeln ist dann doch wieder "typisch Britisch":
| Jack Bailey, 24, the skipper of the 10-metre lobster and crab boat White Waters (...)
“I haven’t landed this year in France. Last year, it was once every seven or 10 days. It’s hard to say what’s going to happen. I wasn’t for Brexit but now I’d like France to exit the EU – then Jersey and France would be able to work it out themselves. I just hope there is a fishing industry left after this.” | |
Wenn doch nur alle aus der EU austreten würden, dann wären alle unsere Probleme gelöst!
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Ja ähh, das sind alles so Dinge, da hätte man vorher überlegen können obs da eeeevtl Probleme geben könnte, wa?
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| Zitat von Maestro
Ja ähh, das sind alles so Dinge, da hätte man vorher überlegen können obs da eeeevtl Probleme geben könnte, wa?
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Gut weil Jersey unabhängig ist durften die afaik nicht abstimmen. Sind also richtig gefickt.
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Und - was machen eigentlich die Britischen Medien, jetzt wo der Brexit vorbei i... ah ok.
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https://twitter.com/tconnellyRTE/status/1400683894744272901 >
| The EU is growing increasingly pessimistic about the prospects of a breakthrough on how the Northern Ireland Protocol is implemented, with senior officials and diplomats warning that the UK appears determined to undermine it.
Senior figures have told @rtenews that a mtg of the EU-UK Joint Cttee next week will be more a showdown over the UK’s continued sniping against the Protocol, and ongoing unilateral moves to delay its implementation, rather than a breakthrough that might end months of tension.
It had previously been hoped that both sides might agree on a combination of flexibilities and a roadmap to full implementation of the Protocol at next week’s meeting. However, the EU’s co-chair of the Joint Committee @MarosSefcovic has told EU ambassadors that the European Commission is running out of patience and will consider using tougher retaliatory measures unless the UK changes course. While Mr Sefcovic did not spell out what these measures will be, it’s understood the Commission is looking at retaliatory instruments within both the Withdrawal Agreement, and the recently ratified Trade and Cooperation Agreement (TCA).
This week the new DUP leader and Stormont Agriculture Minister Edwin Poots announced he was unilaterally extending a grace period relating to the treatment of pets entering Northern Ireland from GB.
The EU has already taken legal action against the UK for a number of unilateral measures it has taken to delay implementation of the Protocol. Nearly 6 mths since the Protocol came into effect, the EU is growing increasingly alarmed at a combination of alleged British tactics. These include the unilateral measures delaying full implementation, constant attacks on the EU’s position on the Protocol by the UK’s chief Brexit minister David Frost, the alleged failure of the UK to provide full access to import databases and the completion of permanent Border Control Posts (BCPs) at NI ports, and the refusal to consider an SPS agreement, which officials say wd do away with 80pc of the checks + controls on the Irish Sea.
“We can't let the UK destroy the Protocol with a thousand cuts,” says one EU diplomat. “If they continue on like this, bit by bit, it will wear away, and they will end up with permanent derogations - or they think they will.”
...
In recent months the UK government has highlighted unionist objections to the Protocol - including the recent street violence - as evidence that the way the EU wants to implement it runs contrary to both the Good Friday Agreement, and the aims of the Protocol itself. EU officials have strongly rejected this allegation, insisting that Brexit itself has damaged the peace process and that the Protocol is the least worst solution to maintain it. ...
Officials in Brussels and Dublin have grown increasingly angry at what they see as the UK placing the burden on “fixing” the Protocol entirely at the EU’s door. However, senior British figures, such as Lord Frost and the Northern Ireland Secretary Brandon Lewis, have accused the EU of taking a dogmatic approach to the protection of the EU’s single market at the expense of everyday life in Northern Ireland. | |
--
https://twitter.com/GavinBarwell/status/1401805490183606272
| It's tempting to believe that - despite all the warnings - the government "underestimated the effect of the protocol", but I'm pretty sure it's not true. They knew it was a bad deal but agreed it to get Brexit done, intending to wriggle out of it later.
David Frost: the EU must revisit the Northern Ireland protocol
The EU has no intention of letting the UK wriggle out of what it signed up to, so we should expect UK/EU relations to get worse before they get better. | |
https://twitter.com/Mij_Europe/status/1401880041458483200
| The dynamic between the UK & EU has fundamentally deteriorated since @DavidGHFrost replaced @michaelgove as the EU's point-person on WA & TCA. Rightly or wrongly, senior EU voices now see Frost as THE KEY problem in the bilateral relationship. ...
The G7 offers an opp for leaders to speak to @BorisJohnson in the margins directly. ... But pressure on Protocol from leader's that Johnson respects - Macron, Merkel, etc could only have a positive impact on UK/EU dynamic - if any at all. It certainly can't/won't contribute to making the situation worse. So why not give it a try?
Of course pressure from @POTUS will also be key. UK side hopes Biden will keep any strictures to Johnson private; EU thinks noises from @WhiteHouse are reassuring & Biden might even link progress on Protocol to prospects of a UK-US trade deal, which Johnson desperately wants.
To be clear: EU isn't naive enough to think Frost has gone rouge. Of course he is an instrument of @10DowningStreet. But the point is - at his level, leaders have an opp to impress upon @BorisJohnson the breadth & importance of EU relationship. | |
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[Dieser Beitrag wurde 1 mal editiert; zum letzten Mal von Herr der Lage am 08.06.2021 3:59]
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| Der Handel mit Großbritannien ist seit Inkrafttreten des Brexit-Abkommens empfindlich gestört. Fisch- und Textilhändlern machen neue Zoll- und Gesundheitsvorschriften besonders zu schaffen. Die Mehrkosten bleiben oft an den Unternehmen hängen. Für europäische Lkw-Fahrer wird die Tour ins Königreich zum Risikotrip.
...
Reportage (Deutschland 2021, 32 Min) | |
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mumpfelgrumpf
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Na ok, DAMIT hätte wohl wirklich niemand rechnen können. In dem Fall machen wir dann mal 'ne Ausnahme. Brexit wird rückgängig gemacht.
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| Zitat von Mürbchen 3rd
Na ok, DAMIT hätte wohl wirklich niemand rechnen können. In dem Fall machen wir dann mal 'ne Ausnahme. Brexit wird rückgängig gemacht.
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Ne, Brexit ist ja gut. Wir sollten nur die Sachen rückgängig machen, die für die Inseleingeborenen plötzlich schwieriger geworden sind.
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Boris Johnson says EU being ‘excessively burdensome’ by enforcing trade checks in his Brexit deal >
| The European Union is being "excessively burdensome" by enforcing trade checks included in the Northern Ireland Brexit deal, Boris Johnson has claimed.
In an interview at the G7 summit in Cornwall the prime minister insisted he was not trying to back out of the deal he had negotiated and signed just over a year ago.
It comes after the EU hinted on Thursday that trade sanctions are a possibility if the UK fails to stand by what it signed.
Mr Johnson's own Brexit chief Lord Frost has said the UK could take further unilateral action to ignore parts of the deal, including refusing to impose checks on processed meats due to come into force at the end of the month. Britain has already extended grace periods included in the accord, effectively overriding parts of the deal to suit British businesses. ...
The EU's insistence on checks and export prohibitions on processed meats for food safety reasons will come as little surprise to the UK, as Mr Johnson signed a unilateral declaration saying the UK understood there would be exactly that. But Lord Frost admitted last weekend that the Northern Ireland protocol had been more damaging to businesses in the territory than UK negotiators had expected. | |
Next time I buy something and the seller demands to be paid, I'll let them know that they are "excessively burdensome".
Then I'll not pay them for weeks after announcing that I unilaterally extended the payment period.
Then I'll pay them half of what I own and tell them not to be a payment purist.
Let's see how that goes.
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Das UK hat einen Free Trade Deal mit Australien in Aussicht, doch viele Details fehlen noch.
Je nach Sichtweise ist das entweder der ganz große Wurf oder heiße Luft.
Boris Johnson hails 'new dawn' as UK and Australia agree free trade deal >
The prime minister says the agreement "opens fantastic opportunities for British businesses and consumers".
Australia trade deal to save each UK household 'up to' £1.22 a year on imported goods >
| However, the Department for Trade admitted the deal would boost GDP by £500 million over 15 years - just 0.025%.
Downing Street also said the removal of tariffs would “save households up to £34million a year” on goods like Jacob’s Creek and Hardys wines, swimwear and confectionary.
There are an estimated 27.8million households in the UK, suggesting No10's mooted saving is worth around £1.22 per household per year. | |
@DavidHenigUK thread on our trade deal with Australia >
| As we might now realise from the rushed agreements with the EU, the details of trade deals are rather important. So if we don't see these today regarding the Australia deal there isn't a lot we can honestly say about whether this is a good or bad deal. But again in broad terms, expect zero overall economic impact (even the pessimistic version of the official impact assessment makes assumptions never met in a trade deal) but some sectoral impact eg farming. And big headlines.
Remember most trade takes place in regional value chains and the UK and Australia being in different regions are typically in different corporate worlds. There will be some new opportunities from some removal of barriers - but most likely not many.
...
Huge difference between a single market, as Australia has with New Zealand or we used to have with the EU, and a tariff reducing agreement. The first is close to free trade, the second is still a world of trade barriers.
Also worth saying that free trade always comes with conditions, the bit you never hear from its self proclaimed cheerleaders. Those conditions always include perceived fairness balanced against outright protectionism. That's the small print we probably won't see today.
Watching the UK-Australia discussion evolve this morning, important we add that the estimated 0.02% UK GDP gain is based on heroic assumptions not even close to being achieved in any previous deal. 0.00% is a more realistic estimate.
...
So far the details of the UK-Australia trade deal announced today have been nothing we didn't already know. Hence the relatively low key announcement. There had to be an announcement as the Australian PM was here. But it doesn't feel like negotiations are in fact complete.
Also watch out for the opportunity cost of new trade deals. Australia got their top asks from the UK - agriculture. The UK didn't have a top ask of Australia, hence why none is being flagged. If we find one in the future, too late, we already gave them what they wanted.
...
So, to summarise, this Australia deal is the second time the UK government has claimed a first post-Brexit trade deal, neither was true as that was EFTA, the economic value is insignificant, and the deal probably isn't quite finished anyway. | |
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Endlich zollfreie Känguruhhoden, wo die Sex Arses-Situation schon so unübersichtlich ist.
Commonwealth stronk!
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| Er halte die konservative Partei für "reaktionär, populistisch, nationalistisch und manchmal sogar ausländerfeindlich", sagte er. | |
Warte jetzt auf Norbert Lammerts Eintritt in die SPD.
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dann wird auch endlich ein Platz in der CDU für Höcke frei. Der wartet bestimmt schon lange darauf.
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Thema: Der Brexit ( Wird das UK die EU verlassen? ) |